View Full Version : tank
BigFish
05-02-2005, 1:27 AM
how would i set up a tank for piranhas
Neo Baron
05-02-2005, 5:33 PM
in my p tank i use a very small amount of gravel maybe a inch at most. i do not have a light because they freak out when it is turned on, use good filtration becuse they make a mess and require good water quality. i have some rocks and drift wood so they can hide and a black backround, stick to dark colors because they like them. and thats my tank.
My last P tank Had undergravel and overside power filter, Black sand and lots of plants. Also, it stood in front of a grey rock facing and the lights were on a timed dimmer switch. Dimmer and sand seemed to be key to not freaking them out. Lifting lid of tank was thier on switch and they would splash and strike at anything that hit the water. Ii I skipped an extra day between feedings they would follow anybody who walked past the tank. I had some silver coins in the sand and sone hand bones from an anatomical display.
piranha45
05-03-2005, 1:09 AM
hand bones in a piranha tank, thats damn cute.
iheartfishies
05-03-2005, 7:34 AM
I'm keen on using the sand also. :)
Neo Baron
05-03-2005, 9:33 PM
say no to the sand idea for the fact that they are very messy and cleaning the sand will be incredibly hard task with fine grade gravel if you want that kind of effect.
iheartfishies
05-03-2005, 9:39 PM
I think the sand is worth the trouble, Black Tihaian, bop whatever it's called, black sand is crucial.
You can siphon it just like gravel, it's awesome.
I have it in my 55, and no problems here.
Mine was just that cheap stuff from lfs and was smooth but pretty coarse grain for sand or superfine grain for gravel. I wasn't running cannister filters so that wasn't a problem, and I did run an under gravel filter with power heads that covered about half the tank floor. I only fed live food and only one feeder at a time so they didn't miss much.
I keep all my fish on sand. I would have subdued lighting. A heater with a guard and external power filteration. Temp around 78oF, a powerhead might be usefull also.
Ta.
Phtstrat
05-29-2005, 11:56 PM
I originally used sand in my Pygo tank, but switched to gravel because cleaning sand was a *****.
I keep a few large pieces of driftwood in there, along with some plants, which the P's have responded well to.
As for equipment, good biological filtration is crucial IME, they get stressed easily under poor water conditions. I'd suggest a couple of Bio-Wheel power filters to do the job.
Additional stuff I have: AC901 PH, 2 300 watt unbreakable heaters, extra lighting for the plants
Neo Baron
06-05-2005, 9:21 PM
see someone agrees w/ me. :grinno:
buddah101
06-06-2005, 10:54 AM
I keep my Pygo in a 75G with a Tilapia butikefori and it has sand in it. I dont think its hard to clean at all. I will eventually move the pygo into it's own enclosure.
piranha45
06-06-2005, 3:01 PM
I keep my Pygo in a 75G with a Tilapia butikefori and it has sand in it. I dont think its hard to clean at all. I will eventually move the pygo into it's own enclosure.
how did those two get along, prior to moving them? how big were they?
rtbguy782
06-21-2005, 2:58 PM
sand gives it more of a real look
jessman
06-21-2005, 8:40 PM
I was wondering Neo what type filtration do you use for your 210 gal tank?
hemptation88
06-22-2005, 1:56 AM
i mixed black and blue sand in my tank w/ drift wood and a like 2 plants off to the side. i also dimmed my lights w/ colored tracing paper(w/ a crayon) :headbang2 . and w/ my p's there not scared of light and dont hide at all.
coolermaster
06-25-2005, 8:59 AM
i have live plants in my tank, sand.. driftwood and rocks :)